Re: MD: Salvaging a recording made with levels set too high?

2000-04-14 Thread Matt Wall


wow from all the farmer kids that are wannabe gangsters around where i live
that have audiovox stero's in thier cars i thought music was supposed to
have pop's in it and sound like total crap.


-Original Message-
From: Timothy P. Stockman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Friday, April 14, 2000 10:02 PM
Subject: MD: Salvaging a recording made with levels set too high?



The result you achieve will depend on how much effort you put into it.  If
its a *really* important recording, you can use Cool Edit (or your favorite
audio editor program) to painstakingly find every annoying pop produced by
the clipping and delete the offending samples.  You have to zoom *way* in,
because often you need to delete only a couple samples at each point, but
you have to do this literally hundreds of times.  I spent about a week
worth
of free time once restoring a 12 minute song that had quite a bit of
clipping because it was an unbelievably great live performance.

-
To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
"unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


-
To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
"unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: MD: Salvaging a recording made with levels set too high?

2000-04-14 Thread las


Matt Wall wrote:

 wow from all the farmer kids that are wannabe gangsters around where i live
 that have audiovox

I thought that Audiovox was one of the best brands that you could buy (from
K-Mart anyway).

 stero's

Your missing an "e" in stereos and there is no apostrophe.

 in thier cars

You mean pickup trucks don't you?  With a gun rack in the back of the cab
right??

 i thought music was supposed to

 have pop's in it

No, no the pops are in their breakfast cereal (along with snap and crackle).
You must be having breakfast with these dudes too often.

 and sound like total crap.

Crap??  What has that got to do with music.  Good or bad??  I thought crap was
the thing that you scrape off you shoe after you go to visit one of these dudes
houses.



 -Original Message-
 From: Timothy P. Stockman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: Friday, April 14, 2000 10:02 PM
 Subject: MD: Salvaging a recording made with levels set too high?

 
 The result you achieve will depend on how much effort you put into it.  If
 its a *really* important recording, you can use Cool Edit (or your favorite
 audio editor program) to painstakingly find every annoying pop produced by
 the clipping and delete the offending samples.  You have to zoom *way* in,
 because often you need to delete only a couple samples at each point, but
 you have to do this literally hundreds of times.  I spent about a week
 worth
 of free time once restoring a 12 minute song that had quite a bit of
 clipping because it was an unbelievably great live performance.
 
 -
 To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
 "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

 -
 To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
 "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-
To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
"unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: MD: Salvaging a recording made with levels set too high?

2000-04-13 Thread Tony Antoniou


Sadly, you're 100% correct. You can always try to use Noise Reduction
methods from Cooledit Pro or Soundforge, but even then, it will still sound
as rough as guts.

Adios,
LarZ

---  TAMA - The Strongest Name in Drums  ---

 -Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]  On Behalf
Of Eric Woudenberg
Sent:   Thursday, 13 April 2000 23:51
To: muggins
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:MD: Salvaging a recording made with levels set too high?


Hi,

"muggins" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Is there any way of salvaging a concert I recorded on minidisc where the
levels are too high ? Please help !! thanks

If you've got digital clipping (lots of clicks) you're pretty much out
of luck, as the information needed to reconstruct what was lost it is
just gone.

I'm passing your note along to the MD mailing list, in case someone
else has a suggestion.


-
To stop getting this list send a message containing just the word
"unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]